The Definitive Guide to Measuring Your First Paid Social Campaign

There’s no doubt that the social media marketing landscape has changed. Across platforms, organic efforts simply don’t see the cut-through they once did — agh, what’s that noise?

That’s a lot of noise to compete with.

Paid and promoted posts, however, are an effective way to cut through the noise to reach your specific target audience when executed strategically.

But all too often, people dive head-first into paid media without a strategy.

They test several elements at once without a goal in mind. They’re left not knowing what worked and what didn’t. Their managers and teams are then hesitant to try it again (or even try it the first time) because they don’t have a clear picture of the value added or investment returned.

With proper objectives, processes, plans and measurement, however, paid ads on social can add measurable value. They can drive purchases or signups, get eyeballs on your content or allow you to learn more about your target audience — specifically, what resonates with them and what doesn’t.

Below, I’ll walk you through:

Defining objectives and KPIs for your social media campaign

Prepping and launching the campaign

Measuring results

Reporting on results and iterating for your next campaign

We’ll eliminate any uncertainty around what should be measured and what should be communicated with your team. And you’ll walk away with a step-by-step approach to measuring your campaign effectiveness so you can get your message to the people who need it.

Step 1: Defining your objectives and KPIs

You’re not going to know if your campaign is successful or not if you don’t know what you’re trying to accomplish.

Behind every well-executed paid social campaign are two important elements:

Plan your ad creative — copy and design that will resonate with that audience. This includes creating snazzy ads and corresponding landing pages that will resonate with them.

Set up tracking for your landing pages using a UTM code builder. UTM codes are a bit of text added to the end of your URL that tell you where exactly visitors came from (which channel, type of ad, campaign, etc).

Step 3: Measuring results

You can check on the results of your campaign in several places.

Google Analytics

In order to know what exactly a visitor is doing after they click the link you’re promoting, you’ll want to track your ad through Google Analytics. This way you can measure more than just post clicks and engagements (likes, comments, shares).

Google Analytics allows you to track conversions from your ads and see what other pages they visited, where they bounced and more. This intel will help you determine whether or not you targeted the right audience with your ad.

While this will come in handy when seeing which social media network is performing well for you, it can also be valuable for testing which creative is converting best (if you create a separate campaign/UTM code for each set of creatives).

When A/B testing, just remember to keep your KPIs in mind. Is your test bringing you closer to the results you set out to get?

Social media dashboards

Google Analytics is effective for tracking conversions and the visitor journey, but it won’t tell you what type of impact your ad had on social media in terms of engagement and awareness.

Social media ad dashboards tell a different part of the story around how your ad is performing. They will tell you how your campaign has impacted your brand awareness on social. Use social media ad dashboards to track followers, likes, shares, comments and clicks within your ad.

To illustrate, let’s look at an example of a promoted post that appeared in readers’ Facebook newsfeeds.

An overview of all campaigns as well as results, reach, cost and amount spent.

To dive deeper, click on each campaign name for detailed results.

A breakdown of cost vs result (click, comment, share, like) for one of our recent promoted post campaigns. A cost per result of $0.83 is about average.

In the Performance tab, you can also click “Custom” to drill down and look at specific results by action, reach, impressions and cost per result. In this example, we’re looking at Actions, which are measured by engagements – specifically, likes, clicks, shares and comments.

To see how viewers are specifically engaging with your ad, scroll down past the graph. In the table, in the Columns drop down, select “Engagement.”

We would have liked to see more shares, but we were happy with 23 comments and 31 likes.

Bonus tip: Promoted posts are typically used to give some extra visibility to a post or piece of content that’s already performing well.

When you do this, you lower your cost per click because the piece has already proven to be of interest to your audience. Essentially, if content performs well organically, the social network knows it’s good content. More clicks = less cost.

A broader view of all networks

So Google Analytics tells one part of your ad’s story, and social media dashboards tell another. How do you get them all together to paint one holistic and simple picture for yourself and your team?

One solution is to create a live paid social campaign dashboard. (Disclaimer: I’m from Geckoboard and we provide a tool to build dashboards. Other dashboarding tools are available!)

A dashboard provides a broad view of your ads’ key performance indicators. It’s also something digestible to share with stakeholders at a glance without having to bog them down with Excel data — or complicated reports from GA and social platforms they might not even have access to.

Rather than focusing on one channel, the dashboard above is tracking snapshots of KPIs in an at-a-glance format across all paid campaigns, illustrating how they compare to each other and which is performing best.

Unpacking this a bit:

In the far left you see the most important stat: number of conversions vs. your target conversions (being signups, purchases, registrations – whatever a conversion means for you). In this example, at 56, we’ve reached 35% of our goal of 160 conversions.

Moving right, you’ll find how much you’re paying for each acquisition through your paid social efforts.

Below that is a line graph indicating how much paid ads on each channel are converting. In this example, Facebook is performing much better than the other channels in terms of volume.

The three KPIs being measured in the last row show you at-a-glance what we walked through in the Facebook Ads Manager above: your campaign’s impact on engagement and awareness.

What kind of insight does this sort of high-level view bring?

Comparing these two graphs (line and bar), it’s clear that LinkedIn is costing more, and you need to either optimize the CPC down by adjusting the audiences you’re targeting or pull back the spend based on the volume of conversions. It may also be worth looking to see if you could increase the volume of conversions on Twitter and Instagram by increasing your CPC bid, given they’re significantly lower than the other two channels.

Step 4: Reporting on the results and iterating

The final step in your paid social campaign is to share the data with your team. You’ll get more ideas and discover new insights as you discuss the campaign results together.

Ideally, the dashboard you’ve built has been front and center in your office or available to your team members no matter where they are (and what they do). You never know, a team member from a different department may have a great idea for a KPI, goal or creative of your ad.

So then, are you ready to start running and measuring your first social media campaign?

About Simon Whittick

Simon Whittick is VP Marketing for Geckoboard, a tool to build live TV dashboards which help teams focus on and achieve goals. Prior to Geckoboard, he spent six years leading marketing for SaaS companies who automate online paid media campaigns including Marin Software and ADGLOW.